Today’s Solutions: May 05, 2024

Bycatch, which is the accidental capture of non-target species such as dolphins, marine turtles, and seabirds, is a pervasive problem in the fishing industry.

Thousands of whales, dolphins, and porpoises drown from getting entangled in nets and lobster potlines every year. The problem is that these underwater creatures use echolocation to “see” and navigate around obstacles, however, most nets are “invisible” to their sonar making them really hard to avoid. 

However, marine biologists in Germany have come up with an ingenious low-tech solution that can make the nets “visible” to acoustic signals so that cetaceans can dodge the nets.

Beaded nets

To make the nets visible, marine biologists are threading them with tiny beads made from acrylic glass. These beads can bounce back bio-sonar signals as echoes, which can be picked up easily by underwater sea life using echolocation to navigate the world. So far, the early trials in the Baltic Sea have suggested that the porpoises were more successful at avoiding the beaded nets than conventional ones.

Sleep swimming

That said, Marine biologist Daniel Stepputtis, from the Thünen Institute of Baltic Sea Fisheries in Rostock, identified one shortfall: some animals would still get entangled in the beaded nets, likely because they were sleeping.

Porpoises can continue swimming even while they sleep, but when they do this, they mute their echolocation. To address this issue, Stepputtis is pairing the beaded nets with an acoustic device that sounds porpoise warning signals that will hopefully warn any slumbering swimmer.

Stepputtis also plans to tune the beads to species’ specific frequencies.

Other solutions

Other solutions to the problem of bycatch have also had encouraging results. One study found that attaching green lights to fishing nets reduces the number of creatures accidentally caught up in fishing nets without impacting fish catches. 

We also shared a few more solutions to this problem in the past. These include LEB, an aquatic scarecrow that protects birds from diving into nets, and AI-equipped fishing nets that help reduce bycatch.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

You can now take Yale’s most popular class online for free

What is the most popular class at one of the world’s most prestigious schools? At Yale, the most popular course on campus is not ...

Read More

Listen to this fascinating piece of ambient music composed by stars

Though we can’t hear them, stars propagate some incredibly soothing soundscapes through the vacuum of space. And for the first time, music composed from ...

Read More

Did you know that volunteering is good for your health?

Volunteering is a great way to have a positive impact while connecting to your community, but did you know that volunteering is actually good ...

Read More

White House and 11 East Coast states partner to bolster offshore wind power

On Thursday, the White House announced that it will partner with 11 East Coast states to bolster offshore wind energy.  This arrangement, called the ...

Read More